Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1991, the company introduced a new version of the system running on a series of 64-bit PowerPC-derived CPUs, the IBM RS64 family. [5] Due to the use of TIMI, applications for the original CISC-based programs continued to run on the new systems without modification, as the TIMI code can be re-translated to the new systems' PowerPC Power ISA ...
IBM AS/400 to IBM eServer iSeries, i for Integrated IBM Netfinity to IBM eServer xSeries , x for eXtended architecture (with respect to "commodity" Intel -based servers) IBM System/390 was replaced by the 64-bit IBM eServer zSeries , z for Zero downtime.
Unlike the previous HMC application on OS/2, the new HMC is web-based which means that even local access is done via a web browser. Remote HMC access is available, although only over an SSL encrypted HTTP connection. The web-based nature means that there is no longer a difference between local console access and remote access, which means a ...
IBM i Access Client Solutions is a Java-based client that runs on Linux, macOS and Windows to provide 5250 emulation. IBM i Access for Web/Mobile provides web-based 5250 emulation. In addition, IBM provides a web-based management console and performance analysis product named IBM Navigator for i. [67]
It was built to run IBM AIX Unix, although it is possible to run a version of Linux minus some POWER4-specific features. It could support up to 32 (1.5, 1.7 or 1.9 GHz) POWER4+ processors and 1 TB of RAM, which weighs well over 1000 kg. It was used in a supercomputer at Forschungszentrum Jülich in 2004, and was discontinued in late 2005. [5]
Servers running processors based on the IBM PowerPC-AS architecture in the AS/400 family (later known as iSeries, then System i) running OS/400 (later known as i5/OS, and now IBM i) Servers and workstations using POWER and PowerPC processors in the RS/6000 family (later known as pSeries, then System p), running IBM AIX and Linux on Power.
Synon was a software company which, at its height, dominated the worldwide market for third-party application development tools for the IBM i (formerly AS/400) platform.Its products continue to be used in that sector today, distributed and supported by Broadcom Inc.
After two years of development, the resulting PowerPC ISA was introduced in 1993. A modified version of the RSC architecture, PowerPC added single-precision floating point instructions and general register-to-register multiply and divide instructions, and removed some POWER features. It also added a 64-bit version of the ISA and support for SMP.